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A source for Sprick is Jan Vermeer,
the Dutch baroque painter of intimate domestic interiors. In
Vermeer’s inhabited, yet extremely quiet, rooms and corners,
magic comes from an earthly, not supernatural light. Yet magic
it is. A Vermeer-like glow infuses many of Daniel Sprick’s
paintings, often falling on objects from some unseen source. It
spreads arbitrarily through his interiors, picking out this
tangerine and that bottle, causing their color and form to
bloom, submerging other parts of the painting in warm shadow.
From Vermeer too, comes the suggestion of worlds within worlds.
Oriental rugs imply distant exotic places (and perhaps Sprick’s
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obsession with flying via magic carpet as well). Paintings and
fine art prints tacked to walls, tantalizing reflections in a
blank television screen, figures half-seen through distant
doorways enhance the notion of time and distance. Daniel Sprick
also revisits the tradition of the still life as memento mori.
Yet again, in these contemporary works, the traditional images
of decay and dissolution –faded flowers, broken china,
eggshells, a human skull---are leavened with humorous elements
such as nibbled cookies and a seeping stain that spreads from a
paper bag to the book it stands on.
For all
his devotion to the realist tradition in painting, Daniel
Sprick’s views are entirely contemporary, and he emphasizes the
abstract underpinnings of his and others’ work. “All art is
abstract, of course. The art is to extract the parts of reality
we can use and leave the rest.” While the content of his
paintings reaches for transcendence, Sprick is pragmatic when he
describes his works’ formal properties, and the preparation he
makes for each one. He is not enamored of laborious painting
techniques. The smoothly pained, jewel-like surfaces of Daniel
Sprick’s images belie the simple, shortcut methods he sues. He
paints on masonite primed with gesso. For smaller works, Sprick
makes a charcoal sketch directly on the support before beginning
to work; larger paintings demand separate studies and
preliminary drawings. |